Workers haul bricks at a construction site in Bangalore, India.
(CNA/Hillary Senour)

| Oct. 21, 2013

Modern Slave Trade Has Many Faces, Human-Rights Authority Says

The newly issued Global Slavery Index shows that more than 75% of the world’s human trafficking occurs in 10 countries, with Mauritania the worst.

ADELAIDE MENA/CNA/EWTN NEWS

WASHINGTON — Modern-day slavery is prevalent throughout the world, even though it goes by different names, a human-rights activist has clarified in light of a new worldwide report.

“Modern-day slavery has many faces,” said Ana Steele, president of the Dalit Freedom Network USA and Dalit Freedom Network UK, explaining that the United Nations’ definition includes “the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labor services, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the removal of organs.”

Regardless of what form it takes, Steele explained, “it is incumbent on each one of us to combat modern-day slavery wherever it exists.”

Her comments come in the wake of the release of the 2013 Global Slavery Index, which detailed the various kinds of modern-day slavery, as well as countries with the highest density.

The Global Slavery Index used research conducted over a period of 10 years and was compiled by a team of four authors and drew from support of 22 experts. Although this is the first, the aim is to conduct a yearly report on global slavery.

The report stated that “modern slavery takes many forms and is known by many names: slavery, forced labor or human trafficking,” and it included these different forms in its study of slavery around the world.

Conducted by the Walk Free Foundation, the study found that, worldwide, there are 29.8 million persons held in modern-day slavery, while researching the countries with the highest proportions of people living in slave-like conditions.

More than 75% of the victims are found in just 10 countries — India, China, Pakistan Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, Thailand, D.R. Congo, Burma and Bangladesh — with India containing nearly 14 million exploited people.

Mauritania in West Africa has the highest rate of slavery, with nearly 4% of its population subjected to some form of slavery.

Steele, whose work focuses on helping Dalit and Adivasi caste members in India escape slavery and extreme poverty, explained that modern slavery is not only a human-rights concern, but a development concern as well.

“Slavery destroys lives, and destroyed lives create a nation in crisis,” she said.

In order to end the toleration of slavery, nations must come together in “a concerted global effort” to do so.

The surest way of eliminating slavery is the use of preventative measures, which “seek to combat the push factors that lead to enslavement” as well as those that “aim to change a life and ultimately change a nation.”

“Our efforts need to include preventing the next generation of victims,” and they should include “programs such as education, health care, economic security building and social-justice advocacy and intervention that serve the most marginalized and at-risk populations,” she said.

Individuals can aid the fight against human trafficking “by committing to stay informed and following organizations that are at the vanguard of anti-slavery work,” helping with “restoration efforts under way for victims of modern-day slavery” and, “most importantly, by supporting prevention.”

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Posted by mrscracker on Monday, Oct, 21, 2013 12:49 PM (EDT):

In proportion to population, Haiti ranks second worldwide for slavery/human trafficking.Children sold as domestic slaves are called “restaveks” (“stay-withs”)

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